Novel gene–intergenic fusion involving ubiquitin E3 ligase UBE3C causes distal hereditary motor neuropathy

Author:

Cutrupi Anthony N12ORCID,Narayanan Ramesh K12ORCID,Perez-Siles Gonzalo12,Grosz Bianca R12,Lai Kaitao13,Boyling Alexandra12,Ellis Melina12,Lin Ruby C Y24,Neumann Brent5,Mao Di6,Uesugi Motonari6,Nicholson Garth A17,Vucic Steve28,Saporta Mario A9,Kennerson Marina L127

Affiliation:

1. Northcott Neuroscience Laboratory, ANZAC Research Institute , Sydney, NSW 2139 , Australia

2. Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of Sydney , Sydney, NSW 2006 , Australia

3. Ancestry and Health Genomics Laboratory, Charles Perkins Centre, Faculty of Medicine and Health, University of Sydney , Sydney, NSW 2006 , Australia

4. Centre for Infectious Diseases and Microbiology, Westmead Institute for Medical Research , Sydney, NSW 2145 , Australia

5. Monash Biomedicine Discovery Institute and Department of Anatomy and Developmental Biology, Monash University , Melbourne, VIC 3800 , Australia

6. Institute for Integrated Cell-Material Sciences and Institute for Chemical Research, Kyoto University , Uji 611-0011 , Japan

7. Molecular Medicine Laboratory, Concord Repatriation General Hospital , Sydney, NSW 2139 , Australia

8. Brain and Nerve Research Centre, Concord Repatriation General Hospital , Sydney, NSW 2139 , Australia

9. Department of Neurology, University of Miami Miller School of Medicine , Miami, FL 33136 , USA

Abstract

AbstractDistal hereditary motor neuropathies (dHMNs) are a group of inherited diseases involving the progressive, length-dependent axonal degeneration of the lower motor neurons. There are currently 29 reported causative genes and four disease loci implicated in dHMN. Despite the high genetic heterogeneity, mutations in the known genes account for less than 20% of dHMN cases, with the mutations identified predominantly being point mutations or indels. We have expanded the spectrum of dHMN mutations with the identification of a 1.35 Mb complex structural variation (SV) causing a form of autosomal dominant dHMN (DHMN1 OMIM %182906). Given the complex nature of SV mutations and the importance of studying pathogenic mechanisms in a neuronal setting, we generated a patient-derived DHMN1 motor neuron model harbouring the 1.35 Mb complex insertion. The DHMN1 complex insertion creates a duplicated copy of the first 10 exons of the ubiquitin-protein E3 ligase gene (UBE3C) and forms a novel gene–intergenic fusion sense transcript by incorporating a terminal pseudo-exon from intergenic sequence within the DHMN1 locus. The UBE3C intergenic fusion (UBE3C-IF) transcript does not undergo nonsense-mediated decay and results in a significant reduction of wild-type full-length UBE3C (UBE3C-WT) protein levels in DHMN1 iPSC-derived motor neurons. An engineered transgenic Caenorhabditis elegans model expressing the UBE3C-IF transcript in GABA-ergic motor neurons shows neuronal synaptic transmission deficits. Furthermore, the transgenic animals are susceptible to heat stress, which may implicate defective protein homeostasis underlying DHMN1 pathogenesis. Identification of the novel UBE3C-IF gene–intergenic fusion transcript in motor neurons highlights a potential new disease mechanism underlying axonal and motor neuron degeneration. These complementary models serve as a powerful paradigm for studying the DHMN1 complex SV and an invaluable tool for defining therapeutic targets for DHMN1.

Funder

National Health and Medical Research Council

Sydney Medical School

The Charcot–Marie–Tooth Association and NIH/NCATS KL2 Career Development Award

Publisher

Oxford University Press (OUP)

Subject

Neurology (clinical)

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